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Preexposure to a nonaggressive opponent prevents low-intensity, social conflict analgesia in mice.
15
Citations
27
References
1987
Year
Acute PainAffective NeuroscienceAttack Bites 24Molecular PainPharmacotherapyPsychologySocial SciencesSocial NeuroscienceAttack BitesSocial Conflict AnalgesiaPsychoneuroimmunologyBehavioral SciencesBehavioral NeuroscienceNeuropharmacologyBehavioral NeuroendocrinologyPharmacologyFirst ExperimentBehavioural PhysiologyPain ResearchSocial BehaviorNeuroscienceAnesthesiaMedicineAnimal BehaviorAggressionAnesthesiology
In a first experiment, exposure of DBA/2 mice to a small number of attack bites by a C57BL/6 mouse resulted in low-intensity analgesia as assessed by the tail-flick test. The analgesia dissipated within 10 min and was insensitive to naloxone (10 mg/kg, sc) but was antagonized by the irreversible opioid antagonist beta-chlornaltrexamine (5 mg/kg, sc). In a second experiment, preexposure to a nonaggressive C57BL/6 opponent prevented low-intensity analgesia induced by a small number of attack bites 24 hr later. The preexposure effect was abolished by naloxone (10 mg/kg, sc) given before the nonaggressive confrontation. This suggests that the release of endogenous opioids during preexposure interferes with the subsequent activation of endogenous opioid-mediated pain control mechanisms.
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